Trader, brewer, newspaper: With Hudson’s Bay no more, what’s Canada’s oldest company?
When Hudson’s Bay closed its department stores for good last year, it left behind more than the wreckage of a once-mighty retail giant.
A lofty title is also up for grabs: Canada’s oldest company.
The defunct retailer would have turned 356 this week — the charter forming the U.K.-headquartered fur trading business was dated May 2, 1670 — and its unique role in the history of Canada means extensive records remain that trace its path through the centuries. But, as The Canadian Press discovered over the past year, determining what company now warrants the descriptor is not clear-cut.
Few businesses from the 17th century have survived, and most companies close to that vintage have complicated histories that involve sales and mergers, closures and revivals. The contenders were all formed decades after Hudson’s Bay and sometimes lack historical records.

